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#1
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| Using a neighbor's wireless internet Sorry, I am a newbie to the laptop world - hubby got me a wonderful new MacBook running on 10.4.8 Two questions, if I am in say, an airport, that is supposed to have free wireless, how do I connect in to that via the Airport - seems like I need a password? Other question, I'm going to be visiting my Mom and I know her next door neighbor has wireless internet and I was going to ask him if I could sign in to it - do I just need to get a password from him? Does, that seem like too much to ask of a nice neighbor? Thanks for the help. |
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#2
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| Hi annfi, 1. from menu bar, airport symbol, select the network or give the credentials. Depending on what has been set for which networks security, you may need password in a format, or you many need user credentials if something nicer (like radius) has been set up. 2. Ask that neighbor. Also because if you would just find out the password for it by your own that would be still using it without permission. If you are only going to be there every now and then and use it very little, most likely they will be fine with it. (Moved to networking..) |
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#3
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| neighbor's wireless Thanks everyone. It was actually a BREEZE getting on. I did call the neighbor ahead of time and he said he didn't have any password protection and we were more than welcome to use it. Turns out when we turned on the laptop it automatically picked up another wireless in the neighborhood but we did switch over to the neighbor we had asked ahead of time. Thanks! |
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#4
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| Oh nice neighbors they have ![]() |
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#5
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| Make sure your neighbor doesn't get in trouble for having more than one user/computer on his network. Sometimes ISP's are very specific about this and recognize how many ips each user is giving out. Just being paranoid. ![]()
__________________ Powerpoint is not a design application |
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#6
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| Then those ISPs would be actively hacking your WiFi router, natobasso, unless that router was _not_ configured for NAT (which is the default for any maker, I believe). From my time working for an ISP I know that as soon as the user uses NAT, all you know from the outside is that he's _probably_ using more than one computer internally. Since that neighbour already had a WiFi network running, quite probably the ISP doesn't notice whether it's 1 or 20 users connected to that network. Apart from a spike in traffic, maybe.
__________________ MacBook Air 13" 1.6 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 MacBook 13" 1.83 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 Hackintosh Core2Duo 2.4 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 160 GB HD. Mac OS X 10.5.4 iPhone 16 GB, AppleTV 1G 40 GB (v2) Mac user since 1987, Apple Product Professional 2007, 2008. |
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#7
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| fryke, glad I'm wrong! Though I didn't see the poster said the router was set to NAT?
__________________ Powerpoint is not a design application |
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#8
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| It is still only going to show an extra "internal" DHCP IP address, no different than if it was the neighbor sitting on his front porch with a wireless enabled laptop.
__________________ find / -name 'george bush' -exec rm {} ; |